Francis A. Adams
Capitolo 2
of picturesque scenery and the modern change reached by the incessant one
man's job, the antithesis between the natural one and the artificial one is
pronounced in many respects; especially to that place in the river where
it crosses the steep banks on that the prosperous city is situated
of Wilkes-bars. Here you/he/she can be seen the stately hills that are standing as
sentinels on the markets of men that crowd the edge of river. The vegetable
of these hills during the greatest part of the year the one sight is that
it cheers the eyes of the miners whose the lives, to a large extent I am
spends in the coal holes.
The portrait would be perfect it was not it for the presence of the
Coal-contact breakers. This stand of structures darkens, grey in a long line on
the bank of the west of the river, and it appears to the eye of one that he/she knows them
purpose as the pitchforks that have punctuated the beaches of England and France
it is due to appear in distance on forehead to the sailors of the Channel during the
Seventeenth century, and when the provisioning of pirates exceeded the number
of pitchforks, great as this number it was in both the earths.
The contact breaker is a really modern invention that, you/he/she had existed him in the
days of the Spanish investigation, you/he/she would have put in the hands of the
fanatical malevolent a tool of delicious torture. It is
built to effect a double purpose the attainment of the maximum one,
of production and the expense of the least one of human effort. It is
the peak of inventive genius. To work the contact breakers, a need of man has anybody
more intelligence that tow-mule that the plods a beaten run; and such
man is the ideal worker from the place of observation of the owners of the
contact breakers.
But such men are not native to America; they must have cared, and
also, that from the most amazed earths from the darkness of Europe.
That that an incubator of humanity deformed that the contact breaker is become! It weakens
the virility attenuated of the also estranges it attracts, and when they is